January 6, 2025

Curlin joins select club as two-time Horse of the Year

Last updated: 1/26/09 9:52 PM










Curlin’s record-breaking season garnered him another Horse of the Year title
(Dubai Racing Club/Andrew Watkins)





Much to the delight of Thoroughbred racing fans, Stonestreet Stables’
CURLIN
(Smart Strike) returned to the races in 2008 after winning Horse of the Year
honors as a three-year-old. The muscular chestnut enjoyed a bountiful season,
breaking Cigar’s North American earnings record and eventually retiring with a
bankroll of $10,501,800. Thus, it was only fitting that Curlin should become the
first horse to repeat as Horse of the Year since Cigar in 1995-96. The honor was
bestowed during Monday night’s Eclipse Awards ceremony at the Fontainebleau
Miami Beach in Miami Beach, Florida.

Curlin was also named the champion older male of 2008 after capturing his
second consecutive Jockey Club Gold Cup (G1) as well as the Dubai World Cup
(UAE-G1), Stephen Foster H. (G1) and Woodward S. (G1).

The Eclipse accolade comes on the heels of the World Thoroughbred
Rankings, in which Curlin was hailed as the joint-best horse in the
world with Epsom Derby (Eng-G1) star New Approach.



Trained by Eclipse Award winner Steve Asmussen, Curlin opened his
four-year-old season in Dubai, easily winning a handicap event under a 132-pound impost before taking on some of the world’s
best horses in the Dubai World Cup. He turned the prestigious 1 1/4-mile event
into a laugher, dominating his nearest rival by a record 7 3/4-length margin, and returned to
the United States for a freshening.









Curlin has an imposing physical presence
(Benoit Photo)





Returning to the races at Churchill Downs in mid-June, Curlin made short work
of his overmatched foes in the Stephen Foster, registering a 4 1/4-length
decision, and his connections then decided to experiment on turf, using the Man
o’ War S. (G1) in July as a possible launching spot toward an engagement in the
Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe (Fr-G1). Curlin didn’t run poorly over the hard course
at Belmont Park, rallying stoutly for runner-up honors behind 2006 Breeders’ Cup
Turf (G1) winner Red Rocks (Ire) (Galileo [Ire]), but the setback eliminated the
Arc from the discussion. The 2007 Breeders’ Cup Classic (G1) and Preakness S.
(G1) winner returned to the dirt for his next two outings.

Curlin never tasted defeat on a dirt track during 2008. He captured the Woodward
at Saratoga in late August and made his penultimate career start in the Jockey
Club Gold Cup at Belmont, winning handily under regular rider Robby Albarado.
Principal owner Jess Jackson, who had serious reservations all year about trying Curlin on
a synthetic track in the Breeders’ Cup Classic at Santa Anita, proved to be the
ultimate sportsman and decided to send Curlin west for a title defense, his career finale.
Displaying the true heart of a champion over unfamiliar footing, Curlin tried as
hard as he could over the Pro-Ride surface, rallying to the lead at the top of
the stretch before weakening to fourth at the finish line, beaten only 2 3/4
lengths. It was not meant to be for the courageous colt, and his supporters will
point to the synthetic as his undoing.



Named for Charlie Curlin, a former slave and Civil War veteran, Curlin
retired with a career line of 16-11-2-2. Bred in Kentucky by Fares Farm Inc., he
sold for $57,000 as a Keeneland September yearling and was originally campaigned
by Midnight Cry Stable, which retained a 20-percent interest after selling the
colt for a reported $3.5 million following his career debut. Curlin is the first
stakes winner out of the unraced Sherriff’s Deputy (Deputy Minister), who has
since produced the juvenile filly Deputy Saint (Saint Liam). This is the same
family as 1997 champion two-year-old filly and Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies
(G1) victress Countess Diana (Deerhound) as well as the ill-fated multiple Grade
1-winning Exogenous (Unbridled).

In 2007, Curlin earned Horse of the Year honors by virtue of victories in the
Breeders’ Cup Classic, Jockey Club Gold Cup, Preakness, Arkansas Derby (G2) and
Rebel S. (G3). He just missed in the Belmont S. (G1) to champion filly Rags to
Riches, and also placed in the Kentucky Derby (G1) and Haskell Invitational
(G1).

The mighty racehorse now stands at Lane’s End Farm near Versailles, Kentucky,
for a $75,000 stud fee.












DIVISION   HORSE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES*
         
HORSE OF THE YEAR   CURLIN   153
    Zenyatta   69
    Big Brown   13
         
OLDER
MALE
  CURLIN   239
    Albertus Maximus   1
    Commentator   1
    Go Between   1

*The tallies represent only first-place votes
from members of the consolidated voting entities, NTRA/Equibase, Daily Racing
Form
and National Turf Writers Association. For each division, the three
horses, or people, with the most first-place votes are listed. 









Zenyatta was a nearly unanimous choice for champion older female
(Benoit Photo)





Twenty years after the great Personal Ensign capped off her
undefeated career with a victory in the Breeders’ Cup Distaff (G1), Jerry and
Ann Moss’s ZENYATTA
(Street Cry [Ire]) moved her record to a perfect nine-for-nine in the newly
renamed Breeders’ Cup Ladies’ Classic (G1) at Santa Anita. The win not only
capped off a stellar year for the John Shirreffs charge, but ensured her name on
an Eclipse Award as 2008 champion older female. She came close to a unanimous
verdict by taking 240 first-place votes, with only two first-place votes cast
for last year’s champion older female Ginger Punch (Awesome Again).

When
accepting the Eclipse Award, record industry magnate Jerry Moss recalled
that Zenyatta’s name comes from the album Zenyatta Mondatta by
The Police. Moss explained that the words mean “the top of the world” in
Sanskrit, and added that’s how they felt at the moment.

Zenyatta’s four-year-old season began with her stakes debut in the El Encino
S. (G2), and the dark bay gave a preview of what the year was to hold when
exploding past her more seasoned rivals in the stretch to record a 1 3/4-length
score. Given a three month break, she returned next out to utilize her soon-to-be-patented late kick to earn her first Grade 1 victory. That particular score
came while Zenyatta was also trying the dirt for the first time in the Apple
Blossom H., where she had Ginger Punch back in third.



Returned to Hollywood Park, Zenyatta continued to pad her resume,
capturing the Milady H. (G2) and Vanity H. (G1) before switching over to Del Mar
and scoring a length tally in the Clement L. Hirsch H. (G2). She had her first
taste of Santa Anita’s new Pro-Ride surface when cruising to a 3 1/2-length
victory in the Lady’s Secret S. (G1), then stayed at that track to dazzle the
Breeders’ Cup Friday crowd with her late charge in the lane.

Zenyatta was leisurely running along in last and still hadn’t been asked for
her run in the Ladies’ Classic when longtime leader Bear Now (Tiznow) entered
the final turn of the nine-furlong event. Not long after, though, the classy
filly simply inhaled her rivals. Circling the entire field rounding the turn,
she continued her run down the center of the stretch, receiving just two taps
from the whip during that time, to draw off by 1 1/2 lengths on the line.

Bred by Maverick Production Limited in Kentucky, Zenyatta went to her current
connections for $60,000 as a Keeneland September yearling. She is out of the
winning Vertigineux (Kris S.), making her a half-sister to multiple Grade 1
queen Balance (Thunder Gulch), the three-year-old filly Treasure Trail (Pulpit)
and the juvenile colt Souper Spectacular (Giant’s Causeway). The now five-year-old
mare, who is from the same family as 2001 Canadian champion turf mare Sweetest
Thing (Candy Stripes), has accumulated $2,144,580 in earnings from her
undefeated line.

Zenyatta is back in training at Hollywood Park in preparation for a 2009
campaign.






OLDER FEMALE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
ZENYATTA   240
Ginger Punch   2
     



BIG BROWN
(Boundary) took the racing world by storm last spring with awesome victories in
the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Florida Derby (G1), and
the Kentucky-bred colt similarly dominated the Eclipse Award voting for champion
three-year-old male. Owned by IEAH Stables and Paul Pompa Jr., the handsome bay captured six of seven starts in 2008, including four Grade 1 wins.









Big Brown’s dazzling Derby will go down in history
(Charles Pravata/Horsephotos.com)





Big Brown opened his 2008 campaign in stirring fashion, registering a 12
3/4-length allowance tally prior to a five-length score in the Florida Derby
from post 12. Trainer Richard Dutrow exuded extreme confidence in the days
leading up to the Kentucky Derby, predicting victory at every opportunity, and
Big Brown did not let him down, recording one of the most dominant Kentucky
Derby wins in modern times. Breaking from the extreme post position 20, Big
Brown was widest of all entering the first turn and catapulted himself around
rivals on the far turn to reach the lead in upper stretch. The favorite cruised
to the finish line under the Twin Spires, remaining unbeaten with a 4 3/4-length
decision over the ill-fated Eight Belles.

Big Brown carried his momentum forward to Pimlico, taking the Preakness by a
convincing 5 1/4 lengths, and his march toward Triple Crown glory looked
inevitable to many onlookers. A big, fast and flashy individual, Big Brown
possessed all the physical tools to end the 30-year Triple Crown drought and
appeared to tower over his overmatched rivals in the three-year-old division.
However, his training for the third leg of the Triple Crown was disrupted by
foot problems, and Big Brown didn’t show up with his best in the Belmont, suffering his only career loss while being eased down the stretch by Kent Desormeaux.



He rebounded in front of a full house at Monmouth Park in the Haskell
Invitational, gamely wearing down the pacesetter to win going away in the
end, and displayed his versatility when taking the grassy Monmouth S. over older
horses in what
turned out to be his final start. Big Brown was unfortunately hurt while
training for the Breeders’ Cup Classic, and he retired to stud with an
8-7-0-0 line and $3,614,500 in earnings.

Bred in Kentucky by Monticule, Big Brown brought the gavel down at $190,000
at the 2007 Keeneland April Two-Year-Olds in Training sale. He is out of the
winning Mien (Nureyev) and counts current three-year-old filly My Chestnut Girl
(Horse Chestnut [SAf]), an unnamed juvenile filly by Touch Gold and a yearling
filly by Belong to Me as half-siblings. This is the same female family as 1997
champion older mare Hidden Lake (Quiet American), who captured that year’s
Hempstead H. (G1), Go for Wand S. (G1), Beldame S. (G1) and Shuvee H. (G2).

Big Brown provided Thoroughbred racing fans around the world with quite a
thrill last season. In 2009, he will begin his new stud career at Three Chimneys
Farm near Midway, Kentucky, for a $65,000 fee.








THREE-YEAR-OLD MALE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
BIG BROWN   219
Raven’s Pass   21
Conduit (Ire)   1
Tale of Ekati   1
     


Following a grueling season for both filly and barn, Brereton Jones’s
homebred PROUD SPELL
(Proud Citizen) was honored as champion three-year-old filly over her gallant stablemate
Eight Belles, by a margin of 90 first-place votes for Proud Spell to 71 for
Eight Belles.









Proud Spell defeated another champion in Indian Blessing
(Lou Hodges/Fair Grounds)





The Larry Jones-trained Proud Spell began her three-year-old campaign in the
same way she ended her juvenile season, with a runner-up effort to champion
Indian Blessing (Indian Charlie). As a two-year-old, she was second in the
Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1), and the Kentucky-bred followed Indian
Blessing home yet again as a three-year-old, this time in the Silverbulletday S.
(G3) at Fair Grounds. She turned the tables on Indian Blessing next out in the Fair Grounds Oaks
(G2), and Proud Spell then ran third in the Ashland S. (G1) over Keeneland’s
Polytrack in her final prep before the Kentucky Oaks (G1). She really showed
what she could do in the latter event, settling just off the leader on the
outside and tracking the pacesetter all the way around the track. Proud Spell
merely opened up on the field in the stretch, drawing off
by five lengths over the sloppy, sealed track after never being challenged.

The Mother Goose S. (G1) at Belmont Park proved to be a true test of heart
for Proud Spell. The problems began at the very beginning as she nearly went to
her knees when the gates opened and found herself squeezed back to last.
Recovering to get up in her usual stalking position along the inside, her next
obstacle came in the stretch when jockey Gabriel Saez attempted to send her
through an opening on the rail. Pacesetter Never Retreat (Smart Strike) drifted
back in and closed the gap, forcing Proud Spell to take up sharply and drop all
the way back to last again. Saez first took his filly to the outside, found the
way blocked and angled her back in when room once again appeared. Proud Spell
began drifting out a bit in the stretch, taking Never Retreat with her, and
eventually finished 3 1/2 lengths back of
Music Note (A.P. Indy) in second.

The stewards disqualified Proud Spell to third and promoted Never Retreat to
second because of that drifting incident. Nonetheless, it was an excellent
effort for the filly, who was cut up a bit during the running of the race, and
she redeemed herself just two weeks later in the Delaware Oaks (G2). Settled
into fourth in that event, she came three wide around the turn and got up late
to score by three parts of a length. Proud Spell then met up with rival Music
Note for only the second time in what was a thrilling edition of the 1 1/4-mile
Alabama S. (G1) at Saratoga. The bay lass had the advantage entering the
stretch, but Music Note was closing on the outside. A gripping match race
developed in the stretch, with the rest of the field forgotten as Proud Spell
and Music Note hooked up. Proud Spell dug in, stretched out her neck and never
let Music Note get past her in the lane, eventually crossing under the line a
head in front.

Proud Spell ended the year in the Cotillion S. (G2), where a demanding
season, bad racing luck and top impost all took its toll. The sophomore was
toting five to 10 pounds more than her rivals in that event and was carried wide
around the final turn. Displaying the courage that had defined her entire
campaign, she didn’t give up, but was forced to settle for second.

Proud Spell is out of the winning mare Pacific Spell (Langfuhr), who has since
produced an unnamed
juvenile colt by Friends Lake and an unnamed yearling colt by Forest Grove. This
is the same family as 1989 Santa Anita Oaks (G1) winner and Kentucky Oaks
runner-up Imaginary Lady (Marfa). Proud Spell has run up a 12-7-3-2, $2,123,610,
so far during her career. She has recently resumed training at Fair Grounds.







THREE-YEAR-OLD FILLY   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
PROUD SPELL   90
Eight Belles   71
Goldikova (Ire)   41
     


MIDSHIPMAN (Unbridled’s
Song) was the clear choice for champion two-year-old
male honors, garnering 195 first-place votes following just one loss from four starts in 2008.
Conditioned by Bob Baffert throughout his juvenile campaign, the chestnut made
his racing debut at Del Mar on August 17, recording a 1 1/4-length maiden
special weight victory on Polytrack









Midshipman will try to follow Street Sense by turning the Juvenile-Derby double
(Benoit Photo)





Returning just 17 days later, Midshipman battled it out late with Coronet of
a Baron (Pure Prize) in the Del Mar Futurity (G1), getting up late
to earn the nose score. He suffered his first loss when second in the Norfolk S.
(G1) at Santa Anita next out, but immediately returned to the winner’s circle in
the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile (G1) at that same track. On that day,
Midshipman assumed command prior to the half-mile point and went on to secure the win by 1
1/4 lengths in what would be his two-year-old
finale. Midshipman thereby emulated his sire, who won the Juvenile in 1995 at
Belmont Park in his third career start.

Days prior to the Del Mar Futurity, Darley Stable acquired Midshipman from
Robert McNair’s Stonerside Stable, along with most of the other assets from
McNair’s Thoroughbred operation. Midshipman was subsequently promoted to Sheikh
Mohammed’s Godolphin team and is currently wintering in Dubai. He will prepare for next
year’s classics with a 4-3-1-0 mark and earnings of $1,380,200.



Out of the multiple Grade 2-winning Fleet Lady (Avenue of Flags), Midshipman
counts 2003 Cotillion H. (G2) victress Fast Cookie (Deputy Minister) as a
half-sibling as well as an unnamed juvenile colt by Ghostzapper and a yearling filly by
Distorted Humor. This is the female family of French Group 1 winner and
successful sire Salse (Topsider), 2008 Sunshine Millions Turf winner
and multiple Grade 1-placed War Monger (War Chant) and, further back, 1956
champion two-year-old filly Leallah (*Nasrullah).







TWO-YEAR-OLD MALE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
MIDSHIPMAN   195
Vineyard Haven   32
Old Fashioned   7
     


A natural come-from-behind runner,
STARDOM BOUND (Tapit) had only one rival beaten
after the first half-mile of the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) at
Santa Anita, but the gray streak showed her typical burst of speed from the back
rounding the second turn and drew off in the stretch for a convincing 1
1/2-length win. In the process, the filly wrapped up champion two-year-old filly
honors in overwhelming fashion with 236 first-place votes.









Stardom Bound could take on the boys this spring
(Benoit Photo)





Stardom Bound kicked off her career with a nose defeat in her debut going 5
1/2 furlongs over Del Mar’s Polytrack on July 20, and again took runner-up
honors in the Sorrento S. (G3) 17 days later in her next start at the track.
Beginning with the Del Mar Debutante (G1), Stardom Bound proved
unstoppable for trainer Chris Paasch, winning that seven-furlong fixture by 4 1/4 lengths, and then
stretching out successfully to take the 1 1/16-mile Oak Leaf S. (G1) by 3 1/2
lengths in her Santa Anita bow.

Stardom Bound is out of My White Corvette, a stakes winner and Grade 2-placed
daughter of Tarr Road, and counts as half-siblings an unnamed juvenile colt by
Roman Ruler and a yearling filly by Lion Heart. Bred in Kentucky by Fletcher Gray, Carolyn
Gray and John Youngblood, Stardom Bound’s record now stands at 5-3-2-0,
$1,420,600.



Purchased for $375,000 at the OBS March Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale,
she raced in the colors of Charles Cono during her championship campaign. On
November 2, Stardom Bound brought a hefty $5.7 million from Nick Sallusto, agent for IEAH
Stables, at Fasig-Tipton’s November Selected Sale at Newtown Paddocks in
Lexington, Kentucky.

Since being purchased by IEAH, Stardom Bound has been transferred to trainer
Bobby Frankel. She has been working sharply toward her three-year-old bow in the
February 7 Las Virgenes S. (G1) at Santa Anita. After that, she may well take on
the boys, and a tilt at the Kentucky Derby (G1) may ultimately be in the cards.







TWO-YEAR-OLD FILLY   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
STARDOM BOUND   236
Maram   2
Springside   2
     


If Lord Palmerston opined that Britain gained its empire in a “fit of
absent-mindedness,” he may well have quipped that the English-based
CONDUIT
(Ire) (Dalakhani) plundered an Eclipse Award in a similarly haphazard fashion.
For Conduit was not even expected to mount a transatlantic invasion, but was
rather slated to go into winter quarters after handing trainer Sir Michael
Stoute his first victory in the St Leger (Eng-G1). Stoute had second thoughts in
the wake of the world’s oldest classic, however, and in a bold change of plan,
he plotted an assault on the Breeders’ Cup Turf (G1) at Santa Anita.









Conduit bagged a Breeders’ Cup trophy and an Eclipse Award in one fell swoop
(Benoit Photo)





Conduit had never faced older rivals before, and he was cutting back from the
extended 1 3/4 miles of the St Leger, on rain-softened turf at Doncaster, to 1
1/2 miles on the firm ground of Southern California. Neither posed the slightest
difficulty for the Ballymacoll Stud homebred, who unleashed a
championship-caliber performance.

After rating well off the blistering early pace, Conduit finished with a
flourish to overwhelm Eagle Mountain (GB) (Rock of Gibraltar [Ire]) and rapidly
kicked 1 1/2 lengths clear. As if the manner of his victory were not impressive
enough, he also managed to set a new stakes record of 2:23 2/5, the fastest
clocking in the 25-year history of the Breeders’ Cup Turf. Eagle Mountain went
on to uphold the form with an emphatic score in the December 14 Hong Kong Cup
(HK-G1), where he dismissed a world-class field.



Given the unsettled, fluctuating state of the American turf division all year
long, Conduit’s Breeders’ Cup triumph was sufficient to clinch the Eclipse
Award. In much the same way, just five years earlier, Ballymacoll’s Islington
(Ire) captured the 2003 Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Turf (G1) for Stoute, and her
lone American start was enough to earn her the Eclipse as champion turf female.

Conduit sports a 9-5-1-2 mark with $2,486,379 in earnings. A
smashing winner of a heritage handicap on Epsom Derby Day, the chestnut finished
a troubled second in the King Edward VII S. (Eng-G2) at Royal Ascot. He has yet
to taste defeat since then. Conduit displayed grit to take the Gordon S.
(Eng-G3) at Goodwood, but he was much more impressive in the St Leger, where he
quickened in devastating style to win by three
commanding lengths.

Out of the unraced Sadler’s Wells mare Well Head, the Irish-bred colt is a
half-brother to English Group 2 winner Hard Top (Ire) (Darshaan), most recently
fourth in the W.L. McKnight H. (G2) at Calder. Well Head is herself a half-sister
to Spectrum (Rainbow Quest), hero of the 1995 Irish Two Thousand Guineas
(Ire-G1) and Champion S. (Eng-G1), and Stream of Gold (Ire) (Rainbow Quest),
victor of last year’s Mac Diarmida H. (G2). Conduit hails from the stellar
family of multiple English and Irish highweight Petrushka (Ire) (Unfuwain), 2000
St Leger hero Millenary (Rainbow Quest), and English and French champion filly
Sun Princess (English Prince).

Conduit is expected to continue his racing career as a four-year-old this
season.







TURF MALE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
CONDUIT (Ire)   175
Einstein (Brz)   31
Grand Couturier (GB)   11
     


Thirty years after they teamed up with Hall of Fame steeplechaser Cafe
Prince, George Strawbridge Jr. and Jonathan Sheppard struck gold once again with
champion turf female

FOREVER TOGETHER
(Belong to Me), whose name sums up their owner-trainer
relationship. At this time last year, Forever Together’s career seemed to be
stuck in a downward spiral, and her subsequent ascent through the turf ranks is
a tribute to the horsemanship of her Hall of Fame conditioner. Sheppard is often
remembered more for his steeplechase stars than his Flat horses, but in light of
Forever Together’s remarkable turnaround, that impression may change.

Forever Together began her career on the dirt. She captured her first three
starts, including
the 2007 Forward Gal S. (G2) at Gulfstream Park, and she just missed by a neck in the Beaumont S. (G2)
next time out on Keeneland’s Polytrack. Thereafter, however, she lost her form.
Forever Together’s nerves began to get the better of her, she became a
non-sweater, and as Sheppard later related, she turned “sour” and did not want
to train.









Forever Together rose from turf debutante to champion in a five-month span
(Benoit Photo)





To promote her ability to sweat, Sheppard prescribed a pint of Guinness stout
every evening, which she happily consumed in her feed. He also switched her to
the grass. Whether Forever Together relished her Guinness, or the turf, or a
combination of the two,
she was a new horse, ready to fulfill her abundant early promise. She went on to
become the latest equine poster child for Guinness, following in the footsteps
of 1985 champion turf mare Pebbles (GB).

Forever Together soon manifested her approval for her new regimen. In her
turf debut, she swept to a 1 1/4-length victory in the Reluctant Guest S. at
Arlington Park in May. Taking a significant hike in class for the Just a Game S.
(G1) next time out at Belmont Park, Forever Together encountered traffic trouble
and had to steady, but she flew home late to finish an eye-catching third.



The Diana S. (G1) at Saratoga proved to be her breakthrough race, as she
crushed an outstanding group. After loping in last early, Forever Together
uncorked an electrifying rally in the stretch to win in grand style, going away
by three-quarters of a length. Things did not go right for her in the Canadian S. (Can-G2),
where she wound up third on yielding ground, but
she rebounded with two convincing victories to earn the Eclipse. In the First Lady S. (G1) at Keeneland,
she rolled past Precious Kitten as if she were standing still, and in the
Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Turf (G1), she outkicked another stellar field in the
final strides. Her record now reads 14-7-1-3 with earnings of $2,004,533.

Bred by White Fox Farm in Kentucky, Forever Together brought $240,000 as an
OBS March two-year-old. She is out of the unraced Relaunch mare Constant
Companion, making her a half-sister to multiple stakes-placed Princess Patricia
(Aptitude). This is the same family as multiple
champion filly Open Mind (Deputy Minister), Canadian Horse of  the Year Peaks
and Valleys (Mt. Livermore), and Grade 2 winner and noted sire Broken Vow
(Unbridled).


Plans call for Forever Together to race in 2009.







TURF FEMALE   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
FOREVER TOGETHER   137
Goldikova (Ire)   94
Cocoa Beach (Chi)   6
     

Though he left the scene in August after an ankle chip was discovered while
preparing for the Forego S. (G1), IEAH Stables et al’s
BENNY
THE BULL
(Lucky Lionel) proved to the satisfaction of the purists that he
was the fastest dirt sprinter in the world, winning all four of his starts
including a 1 3/4-length triumph in the Dubai Golden Shaheen (UAE-G1) halfway
across the globe at Nad al Sheba. Ultimately, the Richard Dutrow charge ended
the year with a 17-9-1-2 career mark and earnings of $2,221,630.

At the time of his injury, it was widely reported that Benny the Bull would
be retired. Upon receiving the Eclipse Award, however, IEAH Stables’ Michael
Iavarone announced that Benny the Bull would return to racing in 2009 in hopes
of defending his sprint crown.









Benny the Bull’s early-season heroics left a big impression on the voters
(Dubai Racing Club/Andrew Watkins)





Ending his 2007 campaign with a victory in the Frank J. De
Francis Memorial Dash (G1), Benny the Bull started 2008 on an authoritative
note, capturing the Sunshine Millions Sprint by 4 1/2 lengths in a time of 1:08
2/5 over Gulfstream’s fast six-furlong course. While impressive in its own
right, a more demanding test awaited in the Dubai Golden Shaheen, run over a
straight six furlongs against a field unrestricted by place of birth. Outpaced
early, Benny the Bull maintained a straight course throughout and wore down
longtime leader Idiot Proof (Benchmark) to win going away in a time of 1:08.70.

Proving that the trip to and from Dubai can take its toll, Benny the Bull was
not nearly as sharp for his next race, the True North H. (G2) at Belmont Park.
Four lengths adrift with a furlong to go, Benny the Bull somehow turned back
certain defeat into a neck victory in the final jump, completing six furlongs in
1:09. In what turned out to be his seasonal finale, Benny the Bull capitalized on
the swift fractions with an off-the-pace rally in the Smile Sprint H. (G2) at
Calder, scoring by two lengths in a time of 1:11 2/5 while toting 124 pounds.
Aboard was Edgar Prado, his pilot throughout his five-year-old campaign.



Bred by Tomoka Farms in Florida, Benny the Bull was originally purchased for
$38,000 at the 2004 Keeneland September Yearling Sale and was bought privately
by IEAH in the middle of 2007. The first foal from stakes
heroine Comet Cat (Birdonthewire), he hails from the family of Blue Finn (Empery), Canada’s champion
two-year-old colt in 1986, and Grade 3-winning millionaire Maysville Slew (Slew
City Slew). Benny the Bull’s fourth dam, Consequential (Dr. Fager), is a
three-quarter sister to Killaloe (Dr. Fager), the dam of 1981 Metropolitan H.
(G1) hero and outstanding sire Fappiano (Mr. Prospector).







MALE
SPRINTER
  FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
BENNY THE BULL   107
Midnight Lute   86
Street Boss   40
     


Hal and Patti Earnhardt’s homebred

INDIAN BLESSING
(Indian Charlie) has blazed many trails in her two seasons
at the track, winning from coast-to-coast on dirt and synthetic surfaces, going
two turns but predominantly around one. In garnering her second divisional
title, the Bob Baffert-trained lass becomes the first juvenile champion of
either sex in more than 50 years to claim a sprinting championship and the first
under the auspices of the Eclipse Awards, which date to 1971.

Dominating in three starts at two, including scores in the Frizette S. (G1)
and Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1), Indian Blessing was initially treated
as a Kentucky Oaks (G1) prospect early in her sophomore campaign. After narrowly
holding on by a head to claim the Santa Ynez S. (G2) at Santa Anita in a
freakish 1:19 2/5 for seven furlongs over the old Cushion Track, Indian Blessing
made her way to Fair Grounds where she captured the Silverbulletday S. (G3) at 1
1/16 miles. However, the speedy bay met her first reversal next out in the Fair
Grounds Oaks (G2), fading into second 2 1/4 lengths behind eventual champion Proud Spell, whom she had beaten by a length in the Silverbulletday.









Indian Blessing made history by landing her second Eclipse Award
(Benoit Photo)





Recognizing the futility in forcing Indian Blessing to harness her speed over
a route of ground, Baffert decided to take her off the Oaks trail and instead
exploit the filly’s specialty — sprinting. Off for nearly three months
following the Fair Grounds Oaks, Indian Blessing reappeared in the one-mile
Acorn S. (G1), but ran into a buzzsaw named Zaftig (Gone West), who slammed the
field by 4 1/2 lengths with Indian Blessing a clear second. Much sharper for her
next start, and for several months thereafter, Indian Blessing proceeded to rack
up scores in the Prioress S. (G1), Test S. (G1) and Gallant Bloom H. (G2), the
latter over older rivals, by a combined margin of 18 1/2 lengths.

After toying with the idea of taking on males in the Breeders’ Cup Sprint
(G1), Baffert instead took the safe route and put Indian Blessing in the Filly &
Mare Sprint at Santa Anita on Breeders’ Cup Friday. Despite escaping in her only
previous start on synthetic, the crowd made her the 9-5 choice in a field of 13.
On top after a 1:07 4/5 three-quarter mile split, Indian Blessing was inhaled by
Ventura (Chester House) en route to a four-length romp, though the favorite held
a two-length cushion for runner-up honors. Not willing to see her season end in
defeat, Baffert brought the champion back on December 27 to notch the La Brea S.
(G1) over her fellow three-year-olds to cap an outstanding season.



Bred in Kentucky, Indian Blessing is out of the stakes-winning and multiple
Grade 3-placed Shameful (Flying Chevron), whose latest offspring are an unnamed
juvenile colt and an unnamed yearling colt, both by Roman Ruler. She
comes from the same family as Japanese Horse of the Year Zenno Rob Roy (Sunday
Silence), Grade 1 heroines Cat’s Cradle (Flying Paster) and Roamin Rachel
(Mining), and Grade 3 victress Another (Seattle Slew).

Indian Blessing’s record currently stands at 12-9-3-0 with earnings of
$2,437,200. Her major early-season goal is the March 28 Dubai Golden Shaheen,
where she would tackle males for the first time.









FEMALE SPRINTER   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
INDIAN BLESSING   138
Ventura   88
Intangaroo   13
     


In a division where multiple seasons of dominance are commonplace, it was not
surprising that Sonny Via’s
GOOD NIGHT SHIRT (Concern) successfully defended his
steeplechase crown in 2008. What was most impressive was the way he did it,
winning five Grade 1 races in as many attempts and bankrolling $485,520, which
smashed his own single-season earnings mark of $314,163 set in 2007. With career
steeplechase earnings of $934,493, Good Night Shirt is now third all-time in
career earnings behind McDynamo and Lonesome Glory, who combined won eight
Eclipse Awards as the nation’s top jumper.

With the exception of his final start of the season, Good Night Shirt was not
seriously challenged during his campaign. After a 1 1/2-length score in the
Georgia Cup (NSA-G1) at Atlanta, the Jack Fisher charge notched his second
consecutive Iroquois Hurdle (NSA-G1) at Percy Warner Park in Nashville,
Tennessee, taking the grueling three-mile test by 4 1/2 lengths. After scoring a
repeat victory four months later in the Lonesome Glory Hurdle (NSA-G1) at
Belmont Park, Good Night Shirt made amends for his fourth-place finish in the
previous season’s Grand National Steeplechase (NSA-G1) at Far Hills, New Jersey,
scoring by four handy lengths under Willie Dowling, who was aboard the chestnut
for each of his starts last season.

Even with the Eclipse virtually sewn up following the Grand National, Good
Night Shirt ventured to Camden, South Carolina, for the division’s final major
test, the 2 3/4-mile Colonial Cup (NSA-G1) over the Springdale Race Course.
Forced to chase a loose-on-the-lead Preemptive Strike (Roanoke), Good Night
Shirt had to endure a stretch-long slugfest with that rival to prevail by a
neck.

The now eight-year-old has amassed a bankroll of $969,083 from a line of
31-13-4-3, which encompasses both his jumps and flat career. In addition to his
stakes triumphs during his two championship campaigns, Good Night Shirt’s resume
also includes a score in the 2006 David L. “Zeke” Ferguson Memorial Steeplechase
S. (NSA-G3).

Bred in Maryland by Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Bowman, Good Night Shirt is out of
the stakes-placed Hot Story (Two Punch), also the dam of the multiple
stakes-placed Story of a Lion (Lion Hearted) and the unraced three-year-old colt
Under Shirt (Polish Miner). This is the family of Heartlight No. One (Rock
Talk), the champion three-year-old filly of 1983, and Grade 1-winning
millionaires Afternoon Deelites (Private Terms) and Soul of the Matter (Private
Terms).









STEEPLECHASER   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
GOOD NIGHT SHIRT   217
Be Certain   1
High Action   1
     


Steve Asmussen, who became the first trainer to win 600 Thoroughbred races in
a single year in 2008, earned his first Eclipse Award for leading trainer. Known
best for conditioning two-time Horse of the Year Curlin, the 43-year-old trainer
enjoyed a banner season in 2008, winning a total of 623 races with more than
$27.8 million in stable earnings. Other major performers included Pimlico
Special (G1) hero Student Council; Pyro (Pulpit), winner of the Risen Star S.
(G3), Louisiana Derby (G2) and Northern Dancer S. (G3); J Be K, who rolled to
impressive scores in the Bay Shore S. (G3), Woody Stephens S. (G2) and Jersey
Shore S. (G3); and Kentucky Cup Classic (G2) victor Zanjero.

Born in Gettysburg, South Dakota, Asmussen hails from a racing family, which
continues to operate El Primero Training Center in Laredo, Texas. His father,
Keith, was a former jockey and trainer. His mother, Marilyn, was a trainer, and
his brother, Cash, won the Eclipse Award as leading apprentice jockey in 1979
and later became a champion rider in Europe. Steve took out his jockeys’ license
at age 16 and rode for three years in New Mexico, California and New York, prior
to retiring because of his size. He began training Thoroughbreds and Quarter
Horses in New Mexico in 1986.

Asmussen, who has led the nation in victories for five of the past seven
years, broke his previous mark of 555 wins in a single season. His previous
555-win season came in 2004, when he shattered Hall of Famer Jack Van Berg’s
record of 496 victories in a single year that had stood since 1976.

Asmussen is proud of the fact that his barn has won with horses at ever
level, from ordinary claimers to Grade 1 performers.

“It’s had a lot to do with my background,” he said upon breaking
the record. “The success we’ve had
with the Curlins and the Pyros has been fantastic. But we came from a small,
Midwestern track, and I like to think that we remember where we came from.”

In February, Asmussen became just the eighth Thoroughbred trainer to score
4,000 wins, and he is now well on his way to 5,000.








TRAINER   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
STEVE ASMUSSEN   187
Bobby Frankel   15
Larry Jones   9
     


Garrett Gomez was named leading jockey for the second consecutive year. The
37-year-old rider just missed establishing a new earnings mark in 2008, banking
$23,564,351 from his mounts. Gomez earned his third Bill Shoemaker Award for the top performance by a jockey in the Breeders’ Cup, winning four races over the
two-day program at Santa Anita.

A native of Tucson, Arizona, Gomez ranked first among all North American
jockeys in earnings for the third consecutive year. He won 214 races from 1,029
starters, a 21 percent success rate. His top mounts included champions
Midshipman (Unbridled’s Song) and Indian Blessing (Indian Charlie) as well as
Breeders’ Cup Sprint (G1) winner Midnight Lute, Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare
Sprint victress Ventura (Chester House), Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile hero Albertus
Maximus (Albert the Great), Travers S. (G1) winner Colonel John (Tiznow) and
Pacific Classic (G1) victor Go Between.

With eight Breeders’ Cup race wins, Gomez is currently tied for fifth, and
he’s got his sights set on Jerry Bailey’s all-time mark of 15.








JOCKEY   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
GARRETT GOMEZ   210
Rafael Bejarano   11
Robby Albarado   9
     


Known for his aggressive riding style, Pascacio Lopez captured the Eclipse
Award as 2008’s leading apprentice. A native of Veracruz, Mexico, Lopez recorded
his first win on July 13, 2007, at Calder and totaled 171 victories before
becoming a journeyman last September.

Lopez, who compiled 13 stakes wins during a four-month period, led all
jockeys with 161 wins during the 2008 Calder meet. His aggressive tactics helped
garner top mounts, but Lopez also ran into trouble with stewards, who handed
down more than 60 days in suspension to the up-and-coming performer. On November
14, management barred him from riding at Calder and other Churchill Downs-owned
tracks through January 2.

Lopez is presently riding at Gulfstream Park and Tampa Bay Downs.









APPRENTICE JOCKEY   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
PASCACIO LOPEZ   150
Inez Karlsson   34
Abel Mariano   18
     


Frank Stronach, who garnered three previous Eclipse Awards as leading owner
in 1998-2000, took home the top award for owner for a record fourth time in 2008.
It was a veritable photo-finish, as Stronach won by a single first-place vote,
47 to 46, over IEAH Stables. His Stronach
Stables ranked second nationally by wins (214) and earnings ($6,677,124).

A native of Weiz, Austria, Stronach immigrated to Canada in 1954 and enjoyed
enormous business success in the tool and die industry. The 76-year-old is the
owner of Magna Entertainment Corp., which owns and operates several racetracks
in the United States, and Stronach has campaigned many top horses over the last
40 years, including 2004 Horse of the Year Ghostzapper, 1997 Belmont S. (G1)
winner Touch Gold and 2000 Preakness (G1) victor Red Bullet.

His top performers in 2008 included Ginger Punch; Ginger Brew (Milwaukee
Brew), who won a Sovereign Award as Canada’s champion three-year-old filly; Harlem Rocker (Macho Uno); and Spring Waltz (Silver Charm). Stronach’s
Adena Springs has breeding farms in Kentucky, Florida and Canada.








OWNER   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
STRONACH STABLES   47
IEAH Stables   46
Stonestreet Stables and Midnight Cry
Stables 
  29
     


Frank Stronach’s Adena Springs maintained its stranglehold upon leading
breeder when winning the Eclipse Award for a record fifth consecutive time in
2008. Stronach also earned the award in 2000.

With breeding and stallion operations in Kentucky, Florida and Canada, Adena
Springs topped all breeders for the sixth consecutive year, and the numbers
weren’t close in 2008. Horses bred by Adena earned $19,247,705 and won 604 races
from 3,679 starts. Stonerside Stable was second-best, with 130 wins and
$8,521,912 in earnings.

Top stallions at Adena Springs include Awesome Again, El Prado (Ire), Ghostzapper
and Macho Uno.







BREEDER   FIRST-PLACE VOTES
     
ADENA SPRINGS   139
Stonerside Stable   60
WinStar Farm   13